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  • With the Shard in the background, a female pedestrian looks unsure about her safety in the tunnel under London Bridge during the evening rush-hour, on 8th November 2018, in London, England.
    city_people-08-08-11-2018.jpg
  • A woman balancing over rocks and logs, crossing a stream near Porva-Csesznek, Veszprem, Hungary.
    hungary_woods-03-25-06-2016.jpg
  • Women balancing over rocks and logs, crossing a stream near Porva-Csesznek, Veszprem, Hungary.
    hungary_woods-01-25-06-2016.jpg
  • Two four year-olds look unhappy and a little nervous during their playgroup's Christmas nativity play in a local church.
    nativity_angels-19-12-1999.jpg
  • A 5 year-old girl stands outside her south London home on the first day of proper school, a momentous day and a rite of passage.
    1st_school_day-10-01-2000.jpg
  • A young woman walking along a London street is about to be splashed by a passing London bus at a flooded bus stop.
    bus_stop03-06-10-2010.jpg
  • Wearing a large green helmet with the number 26 painted on the front, a worried-looking black soldier recruit gazes into the distance in front of a white army  instructor at the large Garrison at Catterick, England. Here, the Parachute Regiment (The Paras) - hold part of their famous basic training programme called Pegasus (P) Company. The most notorious selection procedure in the British Army. After initial recruitment, each student is sent to either pass or fail a set of 9 events from which a total score of 90 points is possible. 58% or more passes, less fails. Events like the 18 mile Forced March followed by a further 5 miles can earn 10 points though this will inevitably prove too much for many young man, desperate to pass P Company and earn his prestigious beret (Like the Foreign Legion).
    army05-15-12-2007 .jpg
  • A departing lover hugs her boyfriend farewell before her long-haul flight in the Departures concourse at. Heathrow Airport's Terminal 5. While embracing her young man, she gazes off into the distance amid the otherwise busy airport terminal where the emotions of parting as well as the joys of reunited loved-ones are played out in various parts of aviation hubs around the world. They are both in their own worlds, removed from the noise and confusion of other passengers. Her departure is brief and yet their sadness of being separated is plainly too much to bear. From writer Alain de Botton's book project "A Week at the Airport: A Heathrow Diary" (2009). .
    heathrow_airport1483-19-08-2009.jpg
  • Using walking sticks, an elderly gentleman gently walks down the steps of Royal Exchange at Bank Triangle, on 10th May 2017, in the City of London, England.
    city_people-19-10-05-2017.jpg
  • A woman balancing over rocks and logs, crossing a stream near Porva-Csesznek, Veszprem, Hungary.
    hungary_woods-02-25-06-2016.jpg
  • Single silhouette of woman walking through the Broadgate corporate offices development in the City of London.
    broadgate_silhouettes01-26-02-2014.jpg
  • A four year-old looks unhappy and a little nervous during their playgroup's Christmas nativity play in a local church.
    nativity_angel-19-12-1998.jpg
  • Young women nervously cycle over a road junction riding Boris bikes outside the Bank of England in the City of London.
    boris_bikes01-17-04-2012.jpg
  • Paramedics assist a bloodied man under the influence of alcohol, picked up by Atlanta police after a street altercation.
    paramedic_help01-10-11-1995.jpg
  • A young lad of 10 poses for a portrait taken by his brother while holding the hand of his young nephew. Confusingly, the 10 year-old uncle and the 1 year-old child are closer in age than the two brothers. The older boy is on holiday in Malawi visiting expat family in the then capital, Blantyre, so named after the town in South Lanarkshire, Scotland, where the explorer David Livingstone was born. Both boys stand in the dust of a back yard where a broken windmill remains upright in the intense brightness of mid-day. It is a scene of awkward and gangly boyhood versus the confidence and innocence of young childhood and their posture is exaggerated by differing heights. Kodachrome film has a wonderful magenta colour cast in mid-tones reminiscent of the classic days of early photography when shifts in color gave a faded look.
    family_archive2620-07_1970.jpg
  • Before they were all replaced as working modes of public transport, a conductor sells a ticket wgile travelling along a London road, as part of a two-man crew of a number 88 red London Rotemaster bus, England UK. A parked car is seen through the open ledge of the bes' rear, blurred in the back ground and a lady passengers sits patiently as the bus speeds on its journey along its route through the capital. The man holds two fingers up to a foreign tourist to make sure they want two tickets for their destination. The conductor is the last human link with friendly public travel in London. He is usually a friendly face to accompany unsure travellers, often helping them reach their stop and answering questions about the journey with good humour and kindness. Their removal in favour of single driver crews meant that bus travel became more intimidating...
    RB_120-22-11-1997.jpg
  • "Then raindrops fell on my head." Looking over the shoulder as a mother pours bath water from a toy seive on to the head of her five month-old baby daughter. The infant looks unsure but otherwise spellbound as the droplets fall, watching them leaving the pot to feel them trickling down. We see the child's trust for her mother and imagine her fascination with tumbling liquid, the feel of it touching her skin. This water is shallow, a child can drown in an inch of water so the mum is supporting the baby's head around the neck in the correct manner. This is from a documentary series of pictures about the first year of the photographer's first child Ella. Accompanied by personal reflections and references from various nursery rhymes, this work describes his wife Lynda's journey from expectant to actual motherhood and for Ella - from new-born to one year-old.
    corbis_ella11-20-04-1995.jpg
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Richard Baker Photography

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